The authors

Price

€ 129.90

ISBN

978-3-902526-51-9 (English)
978-3-902526-50-2 (German)

Content

This work represents a new basis for the study of the Army of the Prussian King Frederick the Great; it is an indispensable standard work for anyone interested in
the military and cultural history and the crafts of that era. It depicts the uniforms of
an army whose military successes laid the foundation for the rise of 18th centuryPrussia as a major European power, and which, like its royal commander became
the military ideal for all of Europe. Their particular style and the grandeur of their equipment were
widely copied, and – uniquely for that day – collected by Frederick’s
successors for posterity. The result of those efforts is the world’s
best collection of 18th century uniforms, now in Berlin’s Deutsches Historisches Museum, located in the old Royal Arsenal, the Zeughaus. Here, for the first time, all of the more than 200 items are presented and described individually and in detail, with high quality colour photographs and precise measurements.
Many of these original pieces were previously unknown, or had been seen only
in drawings or poor quality old photographs. Supplementing these illustrations are photographs of items from other European collections. The total of some 1500 photographs shows an almost complete series of fusiliers’ and grenadiers’ caps, along with such items as cuirassiers’ coatees and hussars’ dolmans, sabretaches, caparisons, cartridge boxes and hats. There are also several uniform coats, including one worn by King Frederick himself.
In addition, this work includes a complete reproduction of the Lace Pattern Book of1755, a manuscript containing the original embroidery and braid patterns of over
100 Prussian regiments, which is kept at the Deutsches Historisches Museum.
Finally it contains reproductions of the portraits of a large number of Prussian Army officers of the Seven Years’ War period, many of them previously barely known; most are from the Field Marshals’ Hall of
the Prussian Military Academy in Groß-Lichterfelde. Also shown are
drawings and black-and-white photographs of items from the old Zeughaus Collection that have since been lost.
The text includes explanations of the uniforms and their development, and short
histories of each regiment in the Old Prussian Army. It is prefaced by historical
essays on the Army of Frederick the Great and the history of the Zeughaus
Collection, and includes an in-depth examination of the materials, designs andproduction methods of the uniforms and trimmings, from the point of view of modern textile conservation.